Abstract

This study examines whether the process of lake acidification influences the accumulation of Fe, Zn and Cu in the tissues of the white sucker (Catostomus commersoni). Concentrations of Fe, Zn and Cu were measured in the liver, kidney and muscle of white sucker sampled from 4 acidic (pH range 4.8–5.3), 1 slightly acidic (pH = 5.8) and 3 circumneutral (pH = 6.3, 6.4) lakes located in south-central Ontario, Canada. Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were used to determine relationships between average elemental concentrations in the 3 tissues and both sediment and water metal concentrations plus lake pH, DOC and alkalinity. Despite the 1000-fold difference in H + concentration among the 8 study lakes, tissue concentrations of Fe, Zn and Cu did not correlate with lake pH. Average Fe, Zn and Cu tissue concentrations did not correlate with metal concentrations in lake water. Only Zn concentrations in the liver and muscle were correlated with Zn concentrations in the sediment (r = 0.83 and r = 0.88, P < 0.05). Iron and Cu were regulated by the white sucker over a wide range of lake pH and metal concentrations in both the water and sediment. In contrast, Zn tissue concentrations were correlated with sediment Zn concentrations, the latter are thought to result from Zn inputs of anthropogenic origin.

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